Puerto Rico's History

1900 - 1949

1900

The island was surrendered to the United States military authority.

On April 2, the Foraker
Law, officially the Organic Act of 1900, is approved, establishing civil government
and free commerce between the island and United States. The law was
introduced into Congress by senator Joseph B. Foraker. Puerto Rico
became U.S. first unincorporated territory.
The new government had an American governor, with 5 Puerto Rican Cabinet members.
The first civil governor (Charles H. Allen) of the island under the Foraker
Act was inaugurated on May 1, in San Juan.

On March 4th, Federico Degetau takes office in Washington as the first Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico.

On March 19, President McKinley asserts the need for free trade
with Puerto Rico.

The Department of Education was formed with Dr. M. G. Braumbaugh
(later governor of Pennsylvania) the first Commissioner of Education.
The method of of teaching was entirely in English with Spanish treated
as a special subject.

The Partido Federal (Federal Party) is founded.
The party campaigns for Puerto Rico to become one of the States in the United
States.

On July 4th, Beeckman Winthrop became the governor of Puerto Rico and served until 1907.

On November 6, the first elections under Foraker Act were
celebrated (registered voters 123,140).

On December 3, the first Legislative Assembly which met.

On December 11, During a visit to Puerto Rico, U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt addressed the Puerto Rican Congress and recommended that Puerto Ricans become United States citizens.

1901

The Hollander Law was approved, giving Puerto Rico a Resident Commissioner
in Washington.

On March 4, Federico Degetau takes
office in Washington as the first Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico.

1902

The Porto Rico Telephone Company was inaugurated.

Cuba declares independence; United States declares Puerto Rico a
territory.

On November 4, the second elections under Foraker Act were
celebrated (registered voters 158,924).

The Official Languages Act (under the Foraker Act) was instituted which declared
that in all insular governmental departments, courts, and public offices,
English was to be regarded
as co-official with Spanish, and when necessary, translations and
interpretations from one language to the other would be made so that all parties
could understand the proceedings.

1903

On January 17, U.S. officially designates Luquillo Forest Reserve the only
tropical rain forest in the National Forest System, the first created by
President Theodore Roosevelt.

Roosevelt signed an executive order to surrender the Culebra to
Navy Control.

1904

Luis Muñoz Rivera and José de Diego founded the Partido Unionista
de Puerto Rico (Unionist Party of Puerto Rico) to fight against the colonial
government established under the Foraker Act (reformation of the Federal
Party).

On July 4, Beeckman Winthrop became the governor of Puerto Rico
and served until 1907.

First universal suffrage was established, men over 21 years old
were allow to participated.

1905

On March 9, a law establishing the official coat of arms was signed.
The original coat of arms was granted by the Spanish Crown in 1511.

1906

The Federacion Libre de Trabajadores (Free Federation of Puerto Rican) is
founded, which was affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Led by
Santiago Iglesias, among others.

On November 6, President Theodore Roosevelt leaves Washington D.C. for a
17 day trip to Panama and Puerto Rico, becoming the first president to
make an official visit outside of the U.S.

On December 11, during a visit to Puerto Rico, U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt addressed the Puerto Rican Congress and recommended
that Puerto Ricans become United States citizens.

1908

Driving licenses began to be issued.

The first motion picture projector was brought to the island. It
is used in a tent theater called "Cine Puerto Rico".

1909

The Olmsted Amendment to the Foraker Act was passed by both houses of
Congress, this act placed the supervision of Puerto Rican affairs in the
jurisdiction of an executive department to be designated by the
president. The legislation was a response to a governmental crisis in
Puerto Rico in early 1909.

1911

The College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was founded in Mayag¨uez.
Today it is known as the University of Puerto Rico - Mayagüez Campus
(UPRM), considered the leading science and engineering institution
in the Caribbean.

1912

On June 29, The Inter American University was established by the United
Presbyterian Church. The IAU is a private, nonprofit institution. The
system includes schools of law and optometry.

Rosendo Matienzo Cintrón, Manuel Zeno Gandía, Luis Llorens Torres,
Eugenio Benítez Castaño, and Pedro Franceschi founded the Partido
Independentista (Independence Party) which was the first party in the history
of the island to exclusively want Puerto Rican independence. Though
short-lived, it established a precedent for future organizations with similar
ideologies.

1914

The first Puerto Rican officers are assigned to the Executive Cabinet,
allowing islanders a majority. The officers were Martin Travieso,
Secretary, and Manuel V. Domenech, Commissioner of Interiors.

The first postal savings bank was opened in San Juan.
The first public coin telephone was installed, operator-assited calls
and the charge for a call was 5 cents. (The first public coin telephone in the
world was installed by William Gray in Hartford, Conn in 1889.)

1915

A delegation from Puerto Rico, accompanied by the Gov. Arthur Yager,
traveled to Washington in order to ask Congress to grant the island more
autonomy.

1916

1917

Puerto Rico became a territory of the United States ("organized but
unincorporated,")

A bill of rights was created.

Separated the three governmental powers into: the legislative,
executive and judicial branches.

United States granted Puerto Ricans U.S. statutory citizenship, which means
that Puerto Ricans were granted citizenship by act of Congress, not by the
Constitution and citizenship is therefore not guaranteed by it. (The Puerto
Rican citizenship ceased, it was not until 1927 that it was reestablished for
residency purposes only.)
As citizens, they were now allowed to
join the army, only 300 rejected the citizenship and many
others refused to join the army. During World War I, over 18,000 Puerto
Ricans served.

Established that elections were to be celebrated every four years.

English is decreed the official language of Puerto Rico.

On the other hand, the Foraker Act still determined economic and fiscal aspects of government.

On May 18, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson signs compulsory military
service act into law. The act required all men in the U.S. between the ages of 21 and 30 to register for military service.
20,000 islanders are drafted into World War I.

On July 6, the first elections under Jones Act were celebrated.

The Organic Act was approved. This gave the island a legislature
(19 senators, 39 representatives) elected freely by the Puerto Rican
people.

1918

"El Imparcial" newspaper is founded.

On October 11, an earthquake occurred, with an approximate magnitude of
7.5 on the Richter scale and was accompanied by a
tsunami which got up to 6 meters
(19.5 feet) high. The epicenter was located northwest of Aguadilla in the
Mona Canyon (between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic), causing great
damage and loss of life at Mayagüez, and lesser damage along the west
coast. The tremors continued for several weeks.

1919

The Puerto Rican National Guard is founded, by MG Luis Esteves who was
the first Puerto Rican Graduate of West Point.

"El Mundo" newspaper is founded.

The U.S. Army Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) program was created.
ROTC was originally compulsory for university students, but became voluntary
after 1960.

1920

Santiago Iglesias Pantín was elected senator, becoming the first
Socialist senator, and marking the rise of the Socialist Party as a major party
in insular politics.

1921

Emmet Montgomery Reilly was appointed governor of Puerto
Rico. (1921-1923) Montgomery is one of the most hated governors.

On June 3, during President Harding's term, the Johnson Act was passed. The act
establishes immigration quotas, restricted the immigration of
Europeans to the United States. The quota system was based on
3% of existing foreign-born nationality's population in US.
As a result, the availability of jobs for Puerto Ricans
choosing to migrate to the United States increased.

1922

In the case of Balzac v. Porto Rico (258 U.S. 308) the U.S. Supreme Court
declared that Puerto Rico was a territory rather than a part of the
Union. The decision stated that the U.S. constitution did not apply in
Puerto Rico.

On September 17, the Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico (Puerto Rican
Nationalist Party) is founded.

On December 3, the first radio station WKAQ was inaugurated.

1925

The construction on the Capitol Building began.

Fort Buchanan was established in 1925, originally named Fort Miles.

1926

On July 23-27, a hurricane strikes the island.

1928

On September 13, Hurricane Saint Phillip II ("San Felipe II") strikes the
island. Three hundred people were killed.

Charles Lindbergh visited the island in his plane Spirit of St.
Louis.

1929

With the Wall Street stock-market crash of 1929 precipitated the Great
Depression, the worst economic downturn in the history of the United States. The
depression had devastating effects on the island, creating widespread hunger and
unemployment. Many banks couldn't continue to operate. Farmers fell into
bankruptcy. The Depression lasted over a decade.

On January 9, Pan Am Airline started the first flights to Miami.

The Air Mail postal service was inaugurated.

Women were given the right to vote, but only to women
who knew how to read and write.

1930

Pedro Albizu Campos was elected president of the Nationalist Party.

1931

On September 10-16, Hurricane Saint Nicholas strikes the island.

1932

On May 17, the Congress of United States approved a law to change back
the name of the island Porto Rico, to its original name, Puerto Rico.

On September 30, Hurricane San Ciprián strikes the
island. Two hundred people were killed, a thousand injured, and property damage
reached $40,000,000.

1933

Blanton Winship was appointed Governor of Puerto Rico, Elisha Francis
Riggs Chief of Police, and Robert A. Cooper Judge of the Tribunal of the
United States in Puerto Rico.

The program for economic assistance known as Puerto Rican Emergency Relief
Administration (PRERA) begins to be implemented.

Sixto Escobar became the first Puerto Rican to win a boxing
championship of the National Boxing Association.

On May 9, cockfighting was legalized in Puerto Rico.

1934

Franklin D. Roosevelt visited the island.

Commissioner of Education José Padín agreed to adopt Spanish as
the language of instruction in the elementary grades, up to grade eight. In
subsequent grades, including higher education, English would continue as the
language of instruction.

1935

On May 28, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the Puerto Rican
Reconstruction Administration (PRRA), which provided for agricultural
development, public works, and electrification of the island.

The Sixto Escobar Stadium was inaugurated.

1936

On February 23, Puerto Rican Nationalists Hiram Rosado and Elias
Beauchamp, in retaliation for the University Massacre ("Masacre of Rio
Piedras"), kill Police Chief Riggs in San Juan. They are captured and
killed in the police headquarters of Old San Juan.

On July 31, Pedro Albizu Campos, Juan Antonio Corretjer, Clemente
Soto Vélez and other Nationalists sentenced to 6-10 years in federal
prison.

Women given full suffrage.

Bacardi y Compañía was established by the Bacardi
family in Puerta de Tierra.

1937

At the beginning of Nacionalista de Puerto Rico Party
parade, in Ponce, occurred as called
"Masacre de Ponce" were 20 people are killed
and 100 people are wounded.

Pedro Albizu Campos and other Nationalists are transferred out of
Puerto Rico to serve time in Atlanta, Georgia.

The Mercedita airport in Ponce started operations.

President Franklin Roosevelt proclaimed every October 12 as
Christopher Columbus Day.

1938

The Partido Popular Democratico (Democratic Popular Party) was founded,
under the leadership of Luis Muñoz Marín, which adopted the
slogan "Bread, Land, and Liberty." The party favored independence for the
country in its initial stages.

The Cervecería India was inaugurated.

1939

The U.S. Navy purchased 27,000 acres of land on Vieques Island.

World War II was the biggest and deadliest war in history, involving more than 30 countries.
Sparked by the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland, the war dragged on for six years until the Allies defeated Nazi Germany and Japan in 1945.

1940

With the 1940 U.S. Nationality Act, which became effective January 13,
1941, ratified by the Nationality Law in 1952, the Congress amended the statute
on naturalization, expanding the applicability of the jus soli rule to
Puerto Rico. Under this Act, all persons born in Puerto Rico after that date
are considered U.S. citizens and, therefore, their U.S. citizenship
is protected under the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
(In 1917, U.S. citizenship granted to Puerto Ricans was a naturalized
legislative or statutory citizenship (Congress can revoke statutory
citizenship under certain conditions).)

Camp Santiago in Salinas was established as a Puerto Rican National Guard
training facility.

1941

United States began to establish military bases in the
islands of Culebra and Vieques.
The Roosevelt Roads Naval Station is one of the largest naval facilities
in the world, covering about 32,000 acres and encompassing three harbors and
two-thirds of the island of Vieques.

The Ponce Cement Corporation was founded and started operations in
Ponce.

1942

The Banco Gubernamental de Fomento was founded.

Puerto Rico Industrial Development Company was established.

On May 11, the 188 Law was signed, the law regulates a industrial
development program, better known as the "Manos a la Obra" (Hands to
work), under the direction of pharmacist Teodoro Moscoso and the Industrial
Company of the Development. ICD became the main promoter of the economic
development in Puerto Rico.

Hiram Bithorn (Chicago Cubs) became the first Puerto Rican to play in the
Major Leagues.

1943

On April 2, U.S. Senator Tydings introduces bill to Congress calling for
independence for Puerto Rico.

The U.S. Postal Service issued an stamp to commemorate the 450th
anniversary of Columbus' landing on Puerto Rico.

During World War II, the Army's 65th Infantry Regiment, a segregated Hispanic unit
made up primarily of Puerto Ricans, nicknamed "Borinqueneers" (special designation), was
sent to Panama to protect the Pacific in 1943, and by 1944, was sent to France.
They participated in the battles of Naples-Fogis, Rome-Arno, central Europe and Rhineland.
The regiment had 23 soldiers killed in action.

During that time, it is estimated by the Department of Defense that 65,034 Puerto Ricans served in the U.S. military.

1945

Puerto Ricans began to emigrate to United States, looking for job and better
economic situation.

1946

On July 7, Pan American Airlines starts non-stop flights to New York.

On July 21, President
Harry Truman designates native born Jesús T.
Piñero governor, becoming the first Puerto
Rican to govern the island.

The Caribbean National Forest, commonly known as "El Yunque" was
designated an insular wildlife refuge.

A bill was passed ordering "the exclusive use of the Spanish language for
teaching in all public schools."

1947

On August 5th, United States Congress passed the Elective Governors Act,
allowing Puerto Ricans to elect their own governor, President Harry Truman
signed the act.

More than 20 airlines provide service between San Juan, Puerto
Rico, and Miami, and San Juan and New York.

1948

Pedro Albizu Campos was invited to speak at the University of Puerto Rico in
Rio Piedras by its students. The Rector Jaime Benitez is against the invitation. A strike
is held in the University of Puerto Rico, which lead to violent police
repression.

The first Olympic participation of Puerto Rico took place in London and
boxer Juan Evangelista Venegas brings home Puerto Rico's first Olympic medal, a
bronze one.

On June 10, the Puerto Rican legislature approved the infamous Law 53, known as "La Ley de la
Mordaza" (Gag Law). The Ley de la Mordaza made it illegal to
display a Puerto Rican flag, to sing a patriotic tune, to talk of independence, and of course to fight for
the liberation of the island. It was also known as "the Little Smith Act" because it was patterned after a
similar fascist law passed for the mainland.

On August 15, gambling was legalized in Puerto Rico.

Luis Olmo (Los Angeles Dodgers) became the first Puerto Rican to play in a
World Series game and the first one to hit a Home Run and to get three hits,
in the same game.

On November 2, the first popular elections for Governor of Puerto Rico take
place. Luis Muñoz Marín was elected, with 61.2% of the vote.

Luis Muñoz Marin campaigned for economic reforms and structural changes
in the political relationship between the U.S. and islanders. Marin and other
political leaders considered agricultural countries to be underdeveloped and
industrial countries developed, manufacturing was seen as the means by which
Puerto Rico could develop economically. As a consequence the government
launched an industrialization program known as "Operation Bootstrap."
Under this program the island was to become industrialized by providing labor
locally, inviting investment of external capital, importing the raw
materials, and exporting the finished products to the U.S. market.

The Statehood Republican Party was founded.

The Catholic University of Puerto Rico was founded. It has
faculties of arts and humanities, science, education, business, and law.

Puerto Rico sends the first delegation to the Olympics.

1949

Caribe Hilton Hotel was inaugurated. (Fomento invested
more than $7 million dollars.) Hilton becomes the first international hotel
chain with the opening of the Caribe Hilton in San Juan.

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